'Aw shoot, the kind of modems we had in the old days were truly
user-friendly. I had a Prentice 212 (1200 baud, whoa!), and it would
come up with a dialing directory! Just one keystroke to select an
entry, and awaaaaaay we go!
Of course, it also had commands to dial any number, if it wasn't in
memory . . .
Jeff
P.S. - I think I still have this thing . . .
Date: Thu, 12 Jun 1997 20:21:59 -0700
Reply-to: classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu
From: Jeff Hellige <jeffh(a)unix.aardvarkol.com>
To: "Discussion re-collecting of classic computers"
<classiccmp(a)u.washington.edu>
Subject: Re: REAL plug&play hardware
Tim Shoppa wrote:
I remember showing an undergraduate how it was
possible to plug
a modem into a terminal and dial up to a shell account. He was
so amazed that the world had been easily fooled into thinking that you
need a computer to access the Internet :-)
Tim,
How true. One of my first experiences with a modem was messing with a
non-Hayes compatible Racal-Vadic with a simple terminal, though I forget
just which terminal it was emulating. Now I occasionally do the
opposite of what you refer to above and hook my Atari ST up to my Amiga
3000 as a VT-100 terminal for shell processes!
Jeff jeffh(a)unix.aardvarkol.com
--
---------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Collector of Classic Computers: Amiga 1000, Apple II+, Atari 800,
800XL, MegaST-2, XE System, Coleco Adam, Commodore 128D, 16, Plus/4,
VIC-20, IBM 5155, Kaypro 2X, Mattel Aquarius, Osbourne Executive,
Radofin Aquarius, TI-99/4A, Sinclair ZX-81, Timex-Sinclair 1000, TRS-80
Color Computer 3, Model 4, and Model 4P. Also Odyssey2, Atari SuperPong
and Atari 2600VCS game consoles